Sunday, September 22, 2013

Murder, Unincorporated

Lately, violent crime in Chicago has been a subject of national interest.  I can see why, since the number of murders in Chicago surpassed NYC's.  However, Chicago is NOT the murder capital of the US, nor is it particularly violent.  These are 2012 crime stats:

1: Flint, Michigan  64.9 murders for every 100,000 citizens
2: Detroit, Michigan   54.6 murders for every 100,000 citizens
3: New Orleans, Louisiana  53.5 murders for every 100,000 citizens
4: St. Louis, Missouri  35.5 murders for every 100,000 citizens
5: Baltimore, Maryland  35 murders for every 100,000
6: Birmingham, Alabama  33.7 murders for every 100,000 citizens
7: Newark, New Jersey  33.1 murders for every 100,000 citizens (NYC has its murders via the Holland tunnel)
7: Oakland, California  33.1 murders for every 100,000 citizens (Frisco has its murders across the bridge)
8: Baton Rouge, Louisiana  28.9 for every 100,000 citizens
9: Cleveland, Ohio  24.6 murders for every 100,000 citizens
10: Memphis, Tennessee  24.1 murders for every 100,000 citizens

People like David Letterman feel threatened by Chicago, and bash it.  Like the murder thing.  Because of his Indiana boyhood, he is afraid of Chicago.   It's bigger than he is, but smaller than NYC, which he now calls home.  NBC, because of falling ratings and the need for change, once threatened to move his show to Chicago, which frightened him.  So he bashes Chicago, as he did in a recent interview with Chicago's mayor..  But Chicago has stringent gun laws.  Most guns in the hands of the Gangster Disciples and Latin Kings come out of Indiana, David's home state, where you can get anything you want.  (And Chicago police have confiscated more guns on the street than New York and LA combined.)  So there, David!

Or maybe it's because of tourism interests in New York and LA, and because we have the best restaurants.

Tuesday, September 10, 2013

WHY ME LUVS CRATE & BARREL


Icky IKEA


Normally I’m not a mean person, but some things just bother me.  The following info was culled from an article by Lauren Collins from a not very recent issue of the New Yorker.  Since the info spans decades, I doubt that it has changed.   What HAS changed is that my daughter is enamored with IKEA.  So I thought I would put this in my blog…

IKEA is the third largest consumer of lumber in the world… after Home Depot and Lowe’s.

Ingvar Kamprad’s paternal grandparents were German immigrants to Sweden.  Ingvar, of course, pulled himself up by his bootstraps and created a mail-order empire.

IKEA’s vision, according to IKEA, is “To create a better life for the many.”  (Hmmm… sorta like Volkswagen, the peoples' car…  1936?)

IKEA is not really a Swedish company.  It’s controlled by INGKAQ Holding, which is in turn controlled by a tax-exempt stichting, a Dutch nonprofit worth around 20 billion Euros.  This foundation was expected to spend a massive 0.2% of its wealth on charitable giving in 2010.

There’s a shell company that sucks off about 3 percent of IKEA store revenues into a holding company in Lichtenstein called Interlogo.  Supposedly for charity, it’s really a corporate slush fund.    Its primary purpose is corporate tax-optimization and anti-takeover protection for IKEA. Kamprad is chairman of the foundation.

Kamprad has been a tax exile in Switzerland since the 1970s.   He doesn’t pay much in the way of taxes, and does little for the Epalinges (Lausanne, Switzerland) community.  The locals consider him a miser.

Kamprad, as a youth, was a Nazi sympathizer, which I guess is okay for German Scandinavians of a certain age.  However, he was active in the fascist Neo-Swedish movement as recently as 1950, and to this day hails its leader (Per Engdahl)  as a great man.

Kamprad is one of the wealthiest people in the world ($33 billion USD).  Supposedly he drives an old Volvo, flies only economy class, and encourages IKEA employees always to write on both sides of a piece of paper.  He reportedly recycles tea bags and is known to pocket the salt and pepper packets at restaurants.  He says "It is not only for cost reasons that we avoid the luxury hotels. We don't need flashy cars, impressive titles, uniforms or other status symbols. We rely on our strength and our will!" However, owns a villa in upmarket Switzerland, a large country estate in Sweden and a vineyard in Provence, France. Additionally, Kamprad has been known to drive a Porsche . [Wikipedia]


ENJOY YOUR MEATBALLS!!